Main Article Content

Presenting features of female collegiate sports-related concussion in South Africa: a descriptive analysis


R. van Tonder
L. Kunorozva
P.L. Viviers
J.C. Brown

Abstract

Background: Sports-related concussion (SRC) is an injury with important implications, especially in collision and contact sports, and has a high symptom  burden. Student athletes face particular psychosocial challenges, especially female students with pre-existing anxiety/depression are at increased risk for  SRC, and have a higher symptom burden before and after injury.


Objectives: Describing female SRC presenting features at a collegiate campus-based sports medicine service; examining the association of prior  concussion history (PCONC) and preexisting anxiety/depression (PMHDx) with SRC.


Methods: A retrospective cohort and statistical analysis (including corrected effect sizes) of Sport Concussion Assessment Tool (versions 3/5) data (Step 1:  PCONC and PMHDx history; Step 2: symptom evaluation) of collegiate female athletes with SRC between 2012 and 2018.


Results: Forty females with  SRC were identified (age 23 ± 3). The five most frequent symptoms were headache (n = 34; 85%), feeling slowed down (n = 33;  83%), pressure in head (n = 33; 83%), don't feel right (n = 32; 80%) and fatigue/low-energy (n = 32; 80%). These five symptoms also had the highest  self-rated severity (median (IQR): headache (3 (2-4)), feeling slowed down (3 (1-4)), fatigue/low-energy (3 (1-5)), don't feel right (3 (1-4)) and pressure in  head (3 (2-4)). PMHDx (n = 8; 62.9 vs 38.6; p = 0.0192; Hedges' gs = 0.95; large ES), and not PCONC (n = 13; 51.0 vs 39.8; p = 0.2183; Hedges' gs = 0.48;  small ES) was associated with increased mean total symptom severity.


Conclusion: Headache, feeling slowed down, pressure in head, don't feel right and  fatigue/low-energy had the highest symptom burden. Total symptom severity was no different in those with and without PCONC, but significantly higher  in those with PMHDx.


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 2078-516X
print ISSN: 1015-5163